Unveiling the “Dark” Side of Business

Authored by rhsmith.umd.edu and submitted by mvea

Companies could be hiring that bad boss on purpose. According to new research from Maryland Smith’s Nick Seybert, the “dark” personality traits – questionable ethical standards, narcissistic tendencies – that make a boss bad also make that person much more likely to go along with manipulating earnings, and may be the reason they got the job in the first place.

Seybert worked with Ling Harris of the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Scott Jackson of the University of South Carolina and Joel Owens of Portland State University for the research, forthcoming the Journal of Business Ethics. They studied the process of hiring executive management accounting candidates and its relation to the company’s earnings management practices – that is, a company's tendency to inflate its income. Through several studies, they found that when a company needed to report earnings aggressively, experienced executives and recruiters tended to recommend hiring candidates with dark personality traits over candidates who sought input from others and believed in strong ethical foundations.

“Dark personality traits are often framed as an accidental byproduct of selecting managers who fit the stereotype of a strong leader,” says Seybert, an accounting professor. “However, our research found that this is often no accident.”

The research involved three experiments in which different actions were measured. In one experiment, for example, the participants were specifically asked to rate the candidates based on dimensions such as the candidate’s ability to manage people and relationships. The only dimension in which candidates with dark personalities were rated higher than their counterparts was in manipulation of ethical boundaries.

“A lot of people assume that these managers must have great self-presentation, promotion, people skills, or confidence” Seybert says. “But our research shows otherwise.”

The basic idea behind this research is that these dark personalities can fulfill a specific nefarious purpose, says Seybert. When companies feel as though they need to inflate their earnings, people with dark personalities are more likely to get placed into positions of power to do exactly that. This results in candidates with potentially better management, organizational, and people skills being passed over for management jobs.

Seybert and his colleagues’ research is unique in that they recruited experienced executives and executive recruiters to evaluate the candidates in order to simulate the real business hiring environment.

“Very, very few prior studies involved people who have experience recruiting for prior jobs,” says Seybert. “Our research involved a lot of time-consuming and creative searching to find the right participants.”

Overall, Seybert hopes that this research will help candidates better evaluate companies during their job search.

“The best takeaway for employees is to avoid companies that might have use for managers with dark personalities, and not to expect support from higher-ups when this is the case. The company might have picked a bad boss on purpose.”

Read the full research, "Recruiting Dark Personalities for Earnings Management," in the Journal of Business Ethics.

BingusBongusBangus69 on April 1st, 2021 at 05:33 UTC »

Gaming is an industry where this is most obvious and blatant. Most people working entry level in gaming are on contracts, meaning they earn hourly, get no overtime, and should the work environment become unfavorable (it always does) they can't get out from under their terrible boss(es). Oftentimes, "crunch" (or overtime) isn't technically required by employers, however it is absolutely expected. If you're a contracted worker, then at best they let your contract run its course and don't hire you back as a full time employee. If you're a good little boy and you work your life away (literally), they might hire you on full time, so that this time when they threaten and extort you into slaving away for other people's happiness, you might at least be paid for it.

Not to mention, many employers will look for fresh faced passionate artists and programmers with no experience specifically in order to take advantage of their passion, so now the employer doesn't need to extort or threaten the employee, because he knows the employee will ruin his life by himself because his passion will drive him into voluntarily working overtime and crunching 24/7. What's worse, is people actually defend "crunch culture", and defend the mistreatment of these workers. One argument that I've personally heard more than I'd like to have heard is "they aren't required to crunch in their contracts, it's not like they have a gun to their head". Except you absolutely do. Your reputation, your job, your passion, your projects, your income, and especially your sanity, are all on the chopping block if you don't crunch. If you don't crunch, your employer (as mentioned before) won't hire you back when your contract runs out. If you're fired for not meeting a deadline because you didn't crunch, no one will hire you.

amasterblaster on April 1st, 2021 at 01:42 UTC »

I once started a business with a sketchy dude, who would do anything and say anything, (which I discovered over time.) I saw right through them. We met with some heavy hitters, like co-founders of companies of Apple size. Some invested as angels. I couldn't figure it out. It drove me crazy -- like if I could see though this guy, clearly THEY could see though him.

BUT, I woke up one day. I realized. All of these smart people knew that my co-founder would do ANYTHING, ANYTHING AT ALL to protect their investment. They just needed him to carry the business 5 years to sell to the next round of investors, which they knew could be done with smoke and mirrors. I realized that many of them respected the "lateral thinking" and "social engineering".

Then I understood. It was easy to tell who he was, and he was a good investment.

Changed my life. Made me sad. Gave me new eyes. All that stuff.

EDIT: OMG thanks guys! I had not idea people enjoyed my experience so much!

stalphonzo on March 31st, 2021 at 23:52 UTC »

In order to maximize profits, you eventually hit a moral and ethical wall. If you intend to breech that wall, you aren't going to need "good people" anymore.